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Let's Check Out Blue Barn Cidery (Because Andrea is making me post this)

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Charles R.
Let's Check Out Blue Barn Cidery (Because Andrea is making me post this)

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She is 100% responsible for this and I take no blame, whatsoever

https://www.bluebarncidery.com
Let's partake in some fermented apples and nosh. And also be amazed as per the snipped below that there was a man named Alamander who married a woman named Jerusha and neither were characters in a Japanese RPG.

### THE FARM

This farm family's roots can be traced back to 1811, when Richard and Rhoda Wilder packed their things and traveled hundreds of miles from their farm in Vermont to start a new life in Churchville, New York, with their young son Alamander in tow. The Wilders farmed in Churchville until 1854 when Alamander and his wife Jerusha Goodell moved to Charlotte, New York. Alamander was both a successful farmer and a foremost citizen of Charlotte, even serving as the President of the Village of Charlotte after it was incorporated in 1869. Alamander and Jerusha’s youngest daughter, Fannie, one of nine Wilder children, married an aspiring farmer named Harry M. Pearson in 1878. The couple carried on the family farming tradition with their four sons, Harry W., Eugene, Morley, and Edward, under the name "H.M. Pearson & Sons."
Harry and Fannie operated the family farm in Charlotte until their sons took over the business and aptly named it “Pearson Brothers Farm.” Edward, the youngest brother, married in 1925. With his wife, Wilma, he expanded the farm to include property in the Town of Greece. Their son, Jack Wilder Pearson, operated the 300-acre farm on English Road in Greece (now Pearson Lane and Orchard Creek Lane) before eventually establishing what is now known as “Green Acre Farm” on Latta Road in 1964.
In 1972, Jack’s daughter Kathy joined the family business, and the family opened the farm to the public for the first time for pick-your-own apples. In 1983, Kathy married Craig Michaloski, and together they began expanding the varieties of fruits offered for pick-your-own. By 1985, the farm would expand again to include property on Manitou Road. Originally used for wholesale only, the Manitou Road farm opened to the public for pick-your-own strawberries in 2001 and was named Green Acres’ West Wind Farm.
Today, Kathy and Craig’s daughter Jill, and her husband, Jeremy Wolf, operate the family farms and continue the legacy that began more than two centuries ago. In 2017, the couple expanded the farm once again, delving into the hard cider industry with the establishment of Blue Barn Cidery at the West Wind Farm.

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Blue Barn Cidery
928 Manitou Road · Hilton, NY